Professor A. Allan Schmid conducted a remarkable 47-year career in the Department of Agricultural Economics. Allan gave his students the tools and motivation to think outside established paradigms and to scrutinize and challenge the assumptions that are the underpinnings of conventional wisdom and traditional economic theory.

To commemorate Professor A. Allan Schmid’s teaching excellence and research scholarship, the Michigan State University Department of Agriculture Economics established the A. Allan Schmid Endowed Fellowship in Institutional Economics. The generosity of Professor Schmid, and his students, friends and colleagues created the endowment. The Schmid Endowed Fellowship will help sustain his legacy in the Department of Agricultural Economics by offering support to graduate students pursuing the study of Institutional Economics. Donate to the A. Allan Schmid Endowed Fellowship.

Throughout his career, University Distinguished Professor Schmid examined the nexus between politics and economics. Exploring the effects of institutions as sets of rules, he inquired into what shapes institutions such as markets, and how those institutions shape economic behavior. Through books such as Property, Power and Public Choice and many journal articles, he has expressed his passion to understand the institutions of social, political and commercial life. His distinguished career was devoted to rigorous theoretical and empirical investigation of institutions using approaches drawn from economics, organization theory, law, political science, and cognitive science. Schmid was named the Inaugeral Fellow of the Institutional and Behavioral Economics Section of the AAEA in 2010.

Students’ affection for Professor Schmid and his reciprocal affection are legendary. Graduate students would come from around the world to take his course and to be challenged by Allan Schmid’s Socratic teaching. A graduate student fellowship at Michigan State University makes a fitting tribute that will sustain inquiry by future generations of institutionalist scholars.

Professor Schmid taught undergraduate and graduate courses on topics in resource economics, rural development, public finance, public choice, and institutional and behavioral economics. Students’ affection for Professor Schmid and his reciprocal affection are legendary. Graduate students would come from around the world to take his course and to be challenged by Allan Schmid’s Socratic teaching. A graduate student fellowship at Michigan State University makes a fitting tribute that will sustain inquiry by future generations of institutionalist scholars.

PRM 201, Community Economics (1993 - retirement). Policy analysis of state and local government revenues, services and private business regulation. Impact on resource use, economic development, income distribution and human values..